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China Sees Huge Growth In Produced Wind Power [2013-4-18]
China has announced a 41% growth in electricity generated from wind power in 2012, which bumps the country closer towards its 2015 target. China’s National Energy Administration statement says total wind power produced last year reached 11.8 billion kilowatt hours, which is a 41% increase on 2011’s 71.5 billion kilowatt hours. Grid-connected installed capacity also increased in 2012 to 62.7 gigawatts, a 31% jump from 47.8 gigawatts in 2011. China is aiming to produce 190 billion kilowatt hours and install 100 gigawatts of grid-connected wind energy by 2015. According to Pew research, China attracted US$29 billion in wind energy investment in 2011, which helped drive 20 gigawatts of new wind capacity in the country; almost half the 43 gigawatts of wind installed globally that year. Changhua Wu, Greater China Director, The Climate Group said: “Renewable energy development and installations have become a proven, key part of China’s efforts to decarbonize its economy. Challenges remain today that need to be addressed, but the progress so far made by the world’s second-largest economy is exciting and encouraging. “China’s leadership and contribution will be well recognized in the global clean revolution. The Climate Group continues our steadfast commitment and efforts to support this process.” As well as approaching its 2015 wind target, China has also increased its 2015 solar power target from 21 gigawatts to 35 gigawatts
Chinese wind power output in 2012 up by 41%
2013-4-16
According to the latest statistics released by the National Energy Administration, China, the world's largest wind power producer, saw its wind power output surge 41% YoY to 100.8 terawatt hours last year. The wind power output last year accounted for about 2% of the country's total on grid electricity. As of the end of last year, the country's on-grid wind power capacity had increased to 62.66 gigawatt hours, 14.82 GW or 31% more than a year ago. By the end of 2012, China had built 1,445 wind farms with 52,827 wind turbines throughout the mainland. The figure included about 1,000 state-owned wind farms, 150 privately owned wind farms
Meaningless info as far as WWEI is concerned.
The only positive I see here is that there is no evidence diluting going on which means the insiders still aren't throwing the shell under the bus...i.e. aren't pumping+dumping.
found this about tammy.http://ca.linkedin.com/pub/tammy-lynn-mcnabb/17/521/976
Tammy-Lynn McNabb
Founder Tech Thirty-One (formerly known as McNabb Marketing)
July 1999 – Present (13 years 10 months) Vancouver, Canada Area
Hospitality Software company. Menu applications for IPad, Android,Touch screens and smartphone allowing restaurants and hotels to provide powerful marketing services to their establishment.
The restaurant/hotel can have immediate control in changing their menus; change features daily without the expense & time of reprinting menus; cross sell or up sell to the customer; indepth wine cellar feature with back end inventory control; seating management; social media options to allow customers to 'like' while dining; video capability - the only software program on the market that can be adapted to any and all marketing requests of our clients.
We also provide social media marketing and public relations marketing for the hospitality industry.
Hold Executive Management position in various companies:
- Wind Energy - CEO, Past
- Low Carb Centres, Founder, Past
-Investor Direct Consulting Group, Founder
no CEO of welwind more!!!!!!! or am I wrong?
question for SEC?no filling about dismissal of tammy.or I see ghosts in the text!!!!!!!
Ha! Almost fell out of my chair laughing. Hey big spenda!
Wow! Lot of cash 2 invest.
Larry just bought 120,000 shares!
Let's hope this is the start of something good.
Growth in China’s Wind Sector Eclipses Growth in Coal [2013-3-25]
China’s use of wind to generate electricity grew faster than coal for the first time in 2012, according to just released numbers from the China Electricity Council.
While fossil-fired generation of electricity grew 0.3 percent last year, wind-generated electricity grew 35.5 percent. Solar-generated electricity grew 414 percent and nuclear generation grew 12.6 percent.
However, these numbers hid the scale of the shift because traditional generation has such a huge pre-existing base:
•Fossil-fired generation, which still accounted for 79 percent of China’s electricity generation in 2012, added 12 terawatt-hours for a cumulative total of 3,910.8 terawatt-hours of generation.
•Wind’s 35.5 percent growth meant an addition of 26 terawatt-hours of generation. But it achieved a much smaller cumulative 100.4 terawatt-hours of electricity production. Its growth did, however, put it ahead of nuclear energy’s cumulative 98 terawatt-hours of generation.
•Solar reached a cumulative 3.5 terawatt-hours of electricity production.
•Hydroelectric power had the biggest total growth of generation in China, adding 196 terawatt-hours to reach 864 terawatt-hours of electricity production.
Total power consumption grew 5.5 percent in China last year, compared to an 11.7 percent growth in 2011, while its gross domestic product grew 7.8 percent, down from 9.2 percent the year below.
The slower economic growth, reduced provincial energy use targets set by the Chinese central government, and a growing antipathy toward fossil-fired generation were all contributing factors, according to Beijing-based Greenpeace East Asia climate and energy campaigner Li Shuo.
“The record air pollution in January this year has changed the discussion about coal,” Shuo added, “and now prominent policymakers and opinion leaders, even vice-ministers, call for capping coal use, especially in the eastern populated and industrial areas of China.”
China to boost renewable energy in 2013 [2013-3-6]
China will sharply boost renewable energy this year, it said Tuesday, after repeated bouts of heavy pollution across much of the country heightened public anger on the issue over recent weeks.
The country plans to increase hydropower generating capacity by 21 million kilowatts this year, wind by 18 million kilowatts and solar energy by 10 million kilowatts, the National Development and Reform Commission said in a report.
The figures are all higher than the annual average increase over the past five years of 20 million kilowatts, 11.6 million and 1.4 million respectively, according to official data.
China depends heavily on coal to power its growth but has set a goal of increasing non-fossil energy use to 15 percent of its total consumption by 2020, up from 9.6 percent in 2010, as part of efforts to address the pollution problem.
The thick smog that blanketed large swathes of the country in recent months has put mounting pressure on the government, with even state media issuing outspoken calls for action.
Local incidents of industrial pollution also regularly spark significant protests.
"We should resolve to solve the problems of serious air, water, and soil pollution that affect the people's vital interests," Premier Wen Jiabao said at the start of China's annual parliamentary session.
"(We should) improve environmental quality, and safeguard people's health, and give the people hope through our concrete action," Wen emphasised, prompting loud applause.
He said the government will restrict total energy consumption, reduce emissions, and upgrade relevant standards and laws to control pollution.
But analysts say that tackling the root causes of the problem, which include reliance on coal-fired power stations and growing car use, are huge tasks that will take decades to address.
China to boost renewable energy in 2013 [2013-3-6]
China will sharply boost renewable energy this year, it said Tuesday, after repeated bouts of heavy pollution across much of the country heightened public anger on the issue over recent weeks.
The country plans to increase hydropower generating capacity by 21 million kilowatts this year, wind by 18 million kilowatts and solar energy by 10 million kilowatts, the National Development and Reform Commission said in a report.
The figures are all higher than the annual average increase over the past five years of 20 million kilowatts, 11.6 million and 1.4 million respectively, according to official data.
China depends heavily on coal to power its growth but has set a goal of increasing non-fossil energy use to 15 percent of its total consumption by 2020, up from 9.6 percent in 2010, as part of efforts to address the pollution problem.
The thick smog that blanketed large swathes of the country in recent months has put mounting pressure on the government, with even state media issuing outspoken calls for action.
Local incidents of industrial pollution also regularly spark significant protests.
"We should resolve to solve the problems of serious air, water, and soil pollution that affect the people's vital interests," Premier Wen Jiabao said at the start of China's annual parliamentary session.
"(We should) improve environmental quality, and safeguard people's health, and give the people hope through our concrete action," Wen emphasised, prompting loud applause.
He said the government will restrict total energy consumption, reduce emissions, and upgrade relevant standards and laws to control pollution.
But analysts say that tackling the root causes of the problem, which include reliance on coal-fired power stations and growing car use, are huge tasks that will take decades to address.
Wind energy hits new milestone in China
[2013-2-28]
China making major progress in the wind energy industry
China has been making significant progress toward meeting its sustainability goals through the adoption of renewable energy. The country has become a leader in the global solar energy industry, with its presence helping drive down the cost of solar panels in numerous markets around the world. The country receives only moderate attention for its wind energy sector, however, which has reached a major milestone. GTM Media Research, a leading market analysis firm, has announced that China’s wind energy capacity has reached new heights.
50GW of installed capacity added in 2012
According to GTM Media Research, China’s wind energy capacity reached over 50 gigawatts in 2012. This is largely due to the numerous wind energy projects that have taken form all over the country and the strong support these projects have received from the Central Government. The growth that China saw in its wind energy sector has made the country a very attractive market, leading many companies specializing in wind power to flock to the country to take advantage of its many opportunities.
Country plans for 40% increase in installed capacity in 2013
China has ambitious plans to further increase its wind energy capacity. The country plans to boost capacity by another 40% by the end of 2013. An extra 18 gigawatts of installed wind capacity will help China make more progress in its ongoing effort to reduce carbon emissions and establish independence from fossil-fuels. Further progress in this endeavor will also single China out as a leader in the adoption of renewable energy.
More than 140GW of installed capacity predicted for 2015
In the past, China has set many goals for installed renewable energy systems. The country has routinely overcome these goals, sometimes excessively so. This has lead the Central Government to refrain from setting particular goals when it comes to certain forms of renewable energy. Based on research from GTM Media Research, the country is expected to have more than 140 gigawatts of installed wind energy capacity by the end of 2015.
Report: More Than 100 Gigawatts in the China Wind Pipeline [2013-2-25]
The long-term plans of China’s biggest wind developers, as detailed in the new GTM Research/Azure International China Wind Market Quarterly: 4th Quarter 2012, reflect a renewed commitment to renewables by the Chinese government.
“The government appears to be back in the game of promoting the domestic renewable energy market,” according to the report. New policies, including new additions to the government’s 2013 targets for solar (10 gigawatts) and wind (18 gigawatts) and a streamlining of access to subsidy funding, are expected “to act as a counterweight to forces outside of China that have hurt the wind and solar sectors.”
Recent signs of an improving domestic Chinese economy and waning anxiety about Europe’s financial crisis add to growing optimism in China’s renewables sector, according to the report.
Though major Chinese wind manufacturers like Goldwind (HKG:2208), Sinovel (SHA:601558), and Ming Yang (NYSE:MY) struggled through the same kind of inventory clearing losses China’s solar panel manufacturers had to endure in 2012, developers fared better, thanks to pipelines that only slowed installation activity gradually and ongoing revenues from past projects.
China’s top three wind developers are Longyuan, Huaneng, and Datang, in that order. Reflecting an ongoing consolidation of big players, the top ten wind developers took approximately 70 percent of China’s Q4 2012 development market.
Longyuan (HKG:0916) is a subsidiary of the Guodian Group, one of the five dominant power-sector state-owned enterprises (SOEs) that provide electricity from all generation sources. Also among the Big Five SOEs are the Huaneng Group, which owns wind developer Huaneng Renewables, and the Datang Corporation, which owns Datang, China’s fastest-growing big wind developer.
Though the Q4 wind installations increase was smaller than in prior years, China’s wind developers’ pipelines reflected optimism about the sector. But grid integration and policy challenges, the report cautioned, “may not be explicitly figured into these corporations’ ever-more-ambitious wind development plans.”
On the other hand, big power producers appear to be “enticed by higher profits than their conventional generation businesses,” the report noted, “and will continue to invest heavily in wind power.” Guangdong Nuclear, for instance, was among the Q4 wind development leaders, with Q4 growth of 26 percent.
Longyuan showed a year-on-year 1H 2012 4.6 percent increase in net profit (RMB 1,821 million) and a 12.4 percent increase in revenues. Longyuan is leading China’s incipient offshore wind sector, though the increased cost and delay between construction and production of ocean development may hamper the company going forward.
Huaneng Renewables (HKG:0958) had a year-on-year 1H revenue growth of 2.4 percent. Net profit fell 62 percent (RMB 277 million) due to increased ledger expenses.
Datang (HKG:1798), which currently has the biggest development pipeline among the big three, increased its 1H revenues by 2.8 percent, though its profit fell 90 percent (RMB 61 million) due to increased ledger expenses. Nevertheless, “Datang is poised to become the largest wind company in China,” the Quarterly reported,” increasing its market share from 16 percent to 20 percent.”
The pipeline numbers may, the report added, underestimate the growth potential of developers such as Hebei Construction Group, State Grid and China Resources (HK:0836), because “industry development targets tend to favor China’s well-established Big Five
Either way. Chinese insider SHs want something for their shares too. Shell has not been abused. Lack of action is certainly better than 100s millions traded at .0001.
If Larry sold the shell, the new company might actually do something, making it automatically more profitable than this pig, which sits belly up rotting in the sun. Besides, it's not like Larry really listens to investor concerns as it is. Sell the shell Larry!
Novel Designs Are Taking Wind Power to the Next Level
http://www.technologyreview.com/news/510481/novel-designs-are-taking-wind-power-to-the-next-level/
Honestly,I dont know how much the Shell of a Company would be worth. Even if they did sell would the new organization listen to the existing investors? I guess not. The existing investors would not even fit into their scheme of things.
I would like to think that there is still hope for the company to get back the Zhinjiang project and the reason why the McNabbs would still be involved.
Why not just shut down completely? What good is a company that does nothing for years? Literally nothing. Wouldn't it make sense o start over with a new CEO who has a better relationship with the Chinese. Larry and Tammy maybe have good intentions, but they have also run this company into the ground. Time to move on and sell the shell so the investors can hopefully recoup some of their losses.
Read something similar few weeks before and this one is more recent.
Considerng the turbine prices have fallen it would work in favour of WWEI if the project comes through:
http://europe.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2013-01/15/content_16117264.htm
Thanks,
rgn
I do go through the posts once in a while just to see if people are active. I think the McNabbs trusted the wrong people. These things do happen but what aggravated the situation is the fact that almost all of them were chinese besides the project also being located in China.If the problems were to happen in a democratic society then things would have settled much earlier.
It is good that they are not issuing any PRs and it is good they are not current with the SEC filings. What purpose does it serve? In my opinion, shutting down the website also makes sense. What new information are they going to provide? To that effect, people like Robert Bragg et al were a waste of time & money.
Honestly, I dont know what is going to happen. Overall, it is risky being involved with the Chinese.
Today is also the Chinese New Year Day.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/festivalsandevents/9856088/Chinese-New-Year-festivals-the-Year-of-the-Snake.html
Thanks,
grajee
Grajee, good to see you're still monitoring this board. I haven't posted in over a year, but still look a few times a month for signs of life. Like you, I have been involved here way too long - i think I bought my first shares in '08. Seems so long ago and was the potential huge, right? Remember the hype? I still don't know wtf happened. I hope to see something, someday. I haven't heard from Larry lately. Tammy, I think, is completely out of the loop. She used to be the face and voice of all things Welwind. Check her out on Twitter and you'll see where she focuses her time now. It's the Larry show from here on out. The company hasn't had a PR or filed with SEC in years. Gone are the days of Tammy at the lead and Shannon as the right hand man. Remember the days of Rob Bragg as investor relation guy? Even if something pops, how do we restart the engine? I still think the company is legit, but McNabbs were duped, therefore I/we were duped. I'm only giving this 5 more years until I sell and take my loss.
I too think that WWEI is not a scam. If Larry & Co were running a scam show then they would have increased the shares and made more money inturn by selling them.
I think Larry & Co were taken for a ride by the Chinese. It has happened to lot of Indian companies doing business in China. The Chinese philosophy is "What I have, I will keep, where as what you have we will share". This is evident in the way the country deals with Border issues with is neighbours.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-03-15/china-corporate-espionage-boom-knocks-wind-out-of-u-s-companies.html
I hope something works out soon. I have been in this for way too long.
China is four-time global wind market leader
[2013-2-7]
China remains the global leader in the wind market, installing over one third of the onshore wind capacity worldwide in 2012.
For four straight years in a row, China has led the global wind market. The Asian country has maintained top position since 2009, when it first over took the United States.
According to figures from Bloomberg News Energy Finance, the country added 15.9 gigawatts of wind power last year, comprising 35 percent of the world’s new capacity.
The U.S. followed closely with installations of 13.2 GW last year.
China’s achievement was reached despite of an 18 percent drop in annual installations from 2011’s record 19.3 GW. Last year saw several projects deferred due to grid connection problems, causing several companies in the supply chain to suffer from delayed payments and subsidies.
Additionally, China also saw decline by 12 percent to $27 billion in new financial investment in wind.
“2012 was a good year for the Chinese wind industry, considering how tough the environment was,” said Demi Zhu, China wind analyst at Bloomberg New Energy Finance.
“This year however, project approvals have sped up and we forecast a modest recovery in both financing activity and construction in 2013,” she noted.
Wind energy is now China’s third largest energy resource, surpassing nuclear power and following coal and hydropower (see related story).
Currently, China has 61 GW of cumulative grid-connected wind energy capacity, accounting for 5.3 percent of the nation’s overall nameplate – and produces two percent of its overall electricity.
“The fact that China wind overtook nuclear as a generation source even in its most challenging year of recent times is a testament to the massive scale and momentum of the industry in this country,” stressed Ms. Zhu.
Between 2014 and 2015, an additional 16.6 GW of wind installations is anticipated come online this year, estimated Bloomberg New Energy Finance. With these, China’s wind industry is most likely to hit the Central government’s 2015 target of 100 GW of grid-connected capacity more than a year ahead.
Combining new power generation from all sources in 2012, China surpassed 80 GW – more than the entire power generation capacity of Australia or Mexico. Of which, 50.7 GW was from thermal, 15.5 GW from hydro, 0.7 GW from nuclear and 1.2 GW from solar.
Mixed Greens: China king of wind energy in 2012
[2013-2-6]
China continues to assert its dominance in the global renewable energy stakes, once again claiming the mantle of greatest installed capacity for wind energy for 2012. According to new figures compiled by Bloomberg New Energy Finance, the country installed 15.9GW of onshore turbines, or more than one-third of all new capacity worldwide. This is the fourth successive year China has led the field, after stealing the crown fro the the US in 2009. The US, with record installations of 13.2GW last year, installed 14 per cent fewer turbines than China.
As we wrote last week, wind energy is now China's third-largest energy source, coming in ahead of nuclear, and behind coal and hydropower. As BNEF reports, China now has 61GW of cumulative grid-connected wind energy capacity – 5.3 per cent of the country’s total nameplate – and generates 2 per cent of its total electricity. And all this despite an 18 per cent decline in annual installations. Needless to say, China’s leading wind turbine suppliers in 2012 were all homegrown: Goldwind, Guodian United Power and Sinovel. The top three developers of wind projects were also large domestic companies: Longyuan Power Group, Huaneng Renewable and Datang Renewable
China’s Wind Energy Investments at an All-Time High
[2013-2-6]
In China, wind energy is quickly overtaking coal and hydro power to become a major source of electricity. In fact, wind energy in China now accounts for 5.3 per cent of the country’s generating capacity and supplies about 2% of its electricity.
However, China has such a major air pollution issue that 2% wind energy electricity is in no way sufficient to make a dent.
Experts forecast a modest recovery in both financing activity and construction in 2013, and the fact that wind energy overtook nuclear as a generation source even in its most challenging year of recent times is a testament to the massive scale and momentum of the industry in this country.
New wind investments were worth $US27.2 billion in 2012, down 12%. Turbine costs fell 10 % as suppliers lowered prices.
China’s adoption of renewable energy has surprised pundits. According to preliminary Bloomberg New Energy Finance research, some 11% of total electricity generation by 2020 will come from non-hydro renewable sources.
Last year, according to BNEF, China added 80GW, with coal-fired places accounting for about 60 % of that increase.
And, on a related note, experts have determined the level of infrasound, or low-frequency sound, at residences close to wind turbines is negligible. In fact, the policy director of Clean Energy says the findings take the emphasis off wind turbines as a source of infrasound and instead demonstrate the culprits are traffic, urban environments, and air conditioners.
China 35% of global wind market in 2012
[2013-2-5]
China was the world’s largest wind market in 2012 in terms of annual installed capacity, according to figures compiled by Bloomberg New Energy Finance. The country installed 15.9GW of onshore turbines, or more than one-third of all new capacity worldwide. 2012 was the fourth successive year China led the field since overtaking the US in 2009. The US, which had record installations of 13.2GW last year, still installed 14% fewer turbines than China.
Wind energy has become China’s third-largest energy source, behind coal and hydropower. China now has 61GW of cumulative grid-connected wind energy capacity – 5.3% of the country’s total nameplate – and generates 2% of its total electricity**. Wind’s new place in China’s power sector comes despite an 18% decline in annual installations, from 2011’s record of 19.3GW, as many projects were delayed due to grid connection issues, leaving many companies in the supply chain suffering from late payments and subsidies.
China’s total new power generation additions from all sources last year exceeded 80GW, more than the entire power generation capacity of Australia or Mexico. The other main sources of new capacity were as follows: thermal 50.7GW, hydro 15.5GW, nuclear 0.7GW, and solar 1.2GW.
During 2012, new financial investment in wind in China also fell 12% to $27.2bn, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance data, although the falling cost of wind energy means that the same dollar amount of investment committed during 2012 will finance 10% more megawatts than had it been committed during 2011. New financial investment is a powerful leading indicator of construction activity, since it leads the completion of onshore wind farms by up to two years. However, Bloomberg New Energy Finance data shows that 15GW – a full 20% of China’s wind capacity – remains unconnected to the grid.
Capacity factors, a measurement of system efficiency, fell slightly in China in 2012 to 21.6%, according to figures from the State Electricity Regulatory Commission, one of the lowest rates in the world. US onshore wind farms have an average capacity factor of around 30%, meaning that one megawatt of wind installed in China produces 70% of the amount of energy the same megawatt of wind would produce if installed in the US. Offsetting this, Chinese turbine prices are around 40% lower than the Bloomberg New Energy Finance Wind Turbine Price Index of international turbine prices.
China’s leading wind turbine suppliers last year were all homegrown: Goldwind (2.8GW, 19% market share), Guodian United Power (1.9GW, 13%) and Sinovel (1.5GW, 10%). This is ranking is unchanged from 2011, when Goldwind and Guodian United Power displaced Sinovel from its top spot. The top three developers of wind projects were also large domestic companies: Longyuan Power Group (1.7GW),Huaneng Renewable (810MW) and Datang Renewable (800MW).
In terms of where the new wind projects were built, Inner Mongolia continued its lead in 2012 with 1.7GW of new capacity, followed by Shandong (1.4GW) and Hebei (1.1GW) provinces.
“2012 was a good year for the Chinese wind industry, considering how tough the environment was,” commented Demi Zhu, China wind analyst at Bloomberg New Energy Finance. “The industry faced many problems including a reluctance by the grid operator to buy all the intermittent electricity produced by wind farms, plus stricter permitting requirements, unpaid subsidies and vigorous government efforts to cool down the industry’s rate of expansion.”
“This year however, project approvals have sped up and we forecast a modest recovery in both financing activity and construction in 2013,” Zhu said. “The fact that China wind overtook nuclear as a generation source even in its most challenging year of recent times is a testament to the massive scale and momentum of the industry in this country.”
Bloomberg New Energy Finance forecasts 16.6GW of installations in China this year and 17-18GW in both 2014 and 2015. At these rates, the industry would achieve the government’s end-2015 target of 100GW of grid-connected capacity more than a year early.
Wind overtakes nuclear in Chinese energy league table
[2013-2-5]
Wind has overtaken nuclear power as the third largest energy source in China, as new figures show the emerging superpower has retained its lead as the largest wind energy market for a fourth successive year.
According to figures published yesterday by Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF), China installed 15.9GW of new wind power capacity in 2012, equal to 35 per cent of the world's new onshore capacity.
The figures also mean that wind power now accounts for 5.3 per cent of China's energy supply, making it the third largest energy source in the country after coal and hydropower.
China has 61GW of cumulative grid-connected wind energy capacity, the analyst firm said, adding that while total wind energy investment fell 12 per cent last year to $27.2bn the funding supported 10 per cent more capacity compared to the same level of investment in 2011, because of the fall in the cost of wind power.
However, BNEF also found that 15GW, equal to 20 per cent of China's wind power capacity, remains unconnected to the grid because of grid connection issues.
The analyst now predicts China will install 16.6GW of new capacity this year, and 17-18GW in 2014 and 2015, allowing the country to meet the government's 2015 target of 100GW of grid-connected capacity more than a year early.
"2012 was a good year for the Chinese wind industry, considering how tough the environment was," said Demi Zhu, BNEF wind analyst.
"The industry faced many problems including a reluctance by the grid operator to buy all the intermittent electricity produced by wind farms, plus stricter permitting requirements, unpaid subsidies and vigorous government efforts to cool down the industry's rate of expansion."
However, Zhu predicted a modest recovery in construction and finance this year as project approvals have sped up.
"The fact that China wind overtook nuclear as a generation source even in its most challenging year of recent times is a testament to the massive scale and momentum of the industry in this country," Zhu said.
The figures also show that the United States installed a record 13.2GW last year as developers sought to take advantage of the wind production tax credit before its expiration at the end of 2012.
Wind energy reaches new milestone in China [2013-2-4]
China wind energy takes another step forward
Wind energy has become China’s third largest source of power, according to the People’s Daily Online. The country has long relied on fossil-fuels, but has been making a concerted effort to embrace alternative energy and environmentally friendly practices. Wind energy has successfully surpassed the country’s nuclear power capacity and is quickly shaping up to become a replacement for nuclear energy altogether. Wind power is only one of the various alternative energies that the country has been focusing on in recent months, with solar energy receiving a significant amount of the government’s attention.
60GW wind energy capacity registered in 2012
Wind energy generation in China totaled 100.4 billion kilowatt-hours in 2012, higher than the country’s nuclear energy generation during the same year. In 2012, China brought more than 60.83 gigawatts of installed wind energy capacity online. This wind energy systems now account for 2% of the country’s energy supply. Though China may have reached a significant milestone, this is only the tip of the iceberg for the country’s plans concerning alternative energy.
Country revises alternative energy goals
Earlier this month, China made revisions to its five-year alternative energy plan. Such revisions have become common for the country, which continues exceed its own expectations when it comes to the use of renewable power. The Central Government has again highlighted alternative energy as a key to the country’s continued economic growth, noting that this sector will be receiving significantly more attention in the coming years. The plan calls for the country to have more than 100 gigawatts of installed wind energy capacity by the end of 2015.Much of the support the wind energy sector will see will come from the China Wind Energy Association.
Wind energy continues to be a major focus for the Central Government
China has emerged as one of the world’s strongest and most aggressive supporters of alternative energy. The country’s focus on solar energy has, indeed, been a controversial topic in other parts of the world, but China’s wind energy industry has not yet encountered such problems. For now, much of the country’s wind energy industry remains within its own borders, though there are some enterprising Chinese companies that have been participating in foreign wind energy markets
Can we ever expect an update from you or should we just check in again next year for more of the same. We understand things work slow over there but at least let us hear from you from time to time, good or bad.
What questions would you ask Larry?
If we could actually get him out of his cave in Canada.
Yes, Larry is incompetent, not a scam artist. Totally agree. End result is the same though. PPS = .0008
I don't think Larry was ever running a scam. the SS is still intact and not diluted to death with CDs and such toxic loans.
I think he learned that businesses in China don't get going nearly as fast as they do in the US.
Often times when I check the board, I wonder.......if Larry has spent the money I donated to his cause yet? Wonder what he spent it on?
Experts Tip China to Reach 100 GW of Wind Power by 2015
[2013-1-21]
Whilst the Bloomberg report earlier this week painted a picture of a world slipping in it’s investment in green energy, one bright spark was China – who have been tipped today to produce a staggering 100GW from wind power alone by 2015.
China, which overtook the United States as the country investing the most in clean energy last year, announced that it was ramping up its wind power development over the next 24 months following a new goal set by the government.
Current policy in the world’s most populous nation has changed to reflect growing optimism in the commercial energy market, with China setting itself a target of 150 GW of wind power by 2020. Deputy director general of China’s National Energy Administration Liu Qi announced that wind power is the third-largest source of energy in China (after thermal and hydropower) and would be the government’s focus leading up to 2020, as “it is the non-hydro renewable energy with the biggest possibility of large-scale development and market utilisation at the moment.”
With the 2020 goal in mind, experts have tipped the country to reach 100 GW by 2015 – no small feat. 100GW in wind power is the same total as the entirety of Europe in 2012, and is comparable to the output of 100 nuclear power stations.
However, there is much work to be done in China before this goal can be achieved; safety issues have arisen as the number one concern, with China’s national grid certifiably too low a capacity to handle that level of power generated by clean energy.
A confusing time in the energy market in China, the goal-focused development in wind power will hope to bring stability to an often contradictory market. As well as being the world’s single biggest investor in zero-carbon energy production, The Economist reports that as of 2011, China is also one of the largest coal-dependant markets in the world, with fossil fuels accounting for 70-80% of the Chinese energy sector.
what the future holds for the company I do not know???????
but in china, we can make a start for this business I think.
good luck to all !!!!!!
I understand that. Thanks for posting them. I only posted my concern regarding where we stand in this game. Are we playing, on the bench, or on the bus heading home. Luck to us all>
with these articles I want to demonstrate that wind power in China's growth.
Speculation is good. Where is Larry involved in this great news coming out of China? Is he in it or has he bolted? Would love to know where we stand or even if we are still standing.
China revs up wind power amid challenges
[2013-1-17]
As the world's largest wind power market, China continues to push forward with wind power installations, yet it faces ongoing problems with grid connection.
New wind power installations in China in 2012 brought the country's grid-connected capacity to more than 60 gigawatts, says the State Electricity Regulatory Commission.
While a total of 100.4 billion kilowatt hours of electricity was generated by wind power last year -- an increase of 35.5 percent over 2011 -- only 12.85 gigawatts was connected to the grid, compared to 2011's figure of 16 gigawatts
"In the past few years, wind farm development has been too rapid and grid construction has not been able to keep up. The huge gap put a lot of pressure on the grid," said Ma Jinru, vice-president and secretary of the board at Goldwind Group, one of China's biggest manufacturers of wind power equipment, China Daily reports.
In a news release Monday promoting a Shanghai wind power exposition, the deputy director general of China's National Energy Administration said that wind energy is China's third largest source of electricity.
"Wind power has become the third-largest electric power in China," Liu Qi said. "There is no electric power to substitute the position of wind power as number three, following thermal power and hydropower."
As part of the National Energy Administration's renewable energy development plan announced last August, China is aiming for 100 gigawatts of wind power to be connected to the grid by 2015, including 5 gigawatts of offshore wind power.
Improved grid construction and dispatching, enhanced equipment performance help the wind power sector reach to reach the 100 gigawatt goal, the news release states.
Also as part of the 2011-15 energy plan, State Grid Corp. of China will invest more than $80 billion to extend the ultra-high-voltage electricity transmission networks in North, Central and Eastern China, China Daily reports.
Meanwhile, China's wind sector face challenges following a U.S. decision to increase import duties on Chinese wind turbines.
In its final verdict in December on anti-dumping and counter-subsidy duties against wind turbine towers imported from China and Vietnam, the U.S. Department of Commerce said that Chinese producers dumped towers in the United States and set anti-dumping duties of 44.99-70.63
"With rates of duty like this, it's impossible for the products of Chinese wind tower manufacturers to enter the U.S. market," Zheng Kangsheng, secretary of the board of Titan Wind Energy (Suzhou) Co. was quoted as saying by China Daily. "The company's U.S. market share will definitely decline sharply," he added
Interesting, thanks Plumo.
China's Offshore Wind Industry Entering Era of Large-Scale Development [2013-1-14]
SHANGHAI-- "Wind power has become the third-largest electric power in China," said Liu Qi, deputy director general of the National Energy Administration. "There is no electric power to substitute the position of wind power as No. 3, following thermal power and hydropower." It was said in the report of the 18th CPC National Congress that "China is determined to promote the revolution of energy generation and consumption, to control the total consumption of energy, to improve energy conservation, and to support the development of energy conservation and the low carbon industry as well as renewable energy in order to ensure the safety of national energy."
The State Council recently released its white paper, "China's Energy Policy", which clearly indicates that "Wind power is the non-hydro renewable energy with
the biggest possibility of large-scale development and market utilization at the moment. Wind power shall be developed efficiently. China's wind power
development is the most rapid in the world. During China's 12th Five-Year Plan, wind power shall be developed in both concentrated and distributed
formats, and the development layout shall be optimized. Wind farm construction will be promoted in areas abundant in wind resources, including the Northwest,
North China and the Northeast, and the utilization of distributed wind resources will be accelerated. Offshore wind power shall be developed steadily.
Standards and industry monitoring for wind power equipment shall be improved. Wind power enterprises will be encouraged to strengthen research of key
technologies to speed up the upgrading of the wind power industry. The consumption capacity of power systems shall be increased by strengthening grid
construction, improving grid dispatching, enhancing equipment performance, advancing wind power predictions and forecasts, and so on. By 2015, China's
total wind turbine installed capacity will hit 100 million kW, including 5 million kW offshore."
Under the guidance of the new national energy policy, China's offshore wind
development has driven into the fast lane. On November 23, Longyuan Wind Power
realized the completion of 150 MW in an offshore wind demonstration project in
Rudong, Jiangsu Province. This is China's largest offshore wind farm to
realize grid integration, and its completion marks the arrival of the era of
China's large-scale offshore wind development. In 2010, Shanghai Donghai Bridge
Offshore Wind Farm realized the grid connection of its Phase I project of 100MW
installed capacity with 34 sets of wind turbines. The wind farm developer has
applied to the National Energy Administration for Phase II of its project of
achieving 100MW installed capacity with 26 sets of wind turbines, including one
5MW wind turbine, the largest in Asia. The others are 3.6MW. The project is
expected to complete construction by the end of 2014. Additionally, Shanghai
Lingang 102 MW Offshore Wind Farm will launch construction in 2013, and expects
to be completed in September 2014. In Jiangsu, the Dongtai 200MW Offshore Wind
Farm by Shandong Luneng Group is expected to launch construction in 2013, as
will the Xiangshui 200MW Offshore Wind Farm by China Three Gorges.
China's offshore wind industry is developing from demonstration projects to
large-scale construction. At this significant moment, OFFSHORE WIND CHINA 2013
will be held again from June 19 to 21, 2013, at the Shanghai New International
Expo Center and Shangri-La's Kerry Hotel, Pudong. Organized by the Chinese
Renewable Energy Industries Association, the National Renewable Energy Center,
and Shanghai International Exhibition Co., Ltd, it has become Asia's No. 1 and
the world's No. 2 offshore wind trade event.
During the event, leaders from the National Energy Administration and provincial
Development & Reform Commissions of China's coastal provinces will visit and
give guidance. China's top-five wind farm developers also will be present.
Sinovel and Vestas will lead key players in the wind industry to
enthusiastically participate. In addition, many well-developed countries in the
offshore wind industry, like Denmark, the U.K., Holland, Germany and Norway
will organize national pavilions and send experts, scholars and entrepreneurs
to gather for the development of global offshore wind energy. The exhibition
will cover a wide range, from wind turbine manufacturers, main components
suppliers, and offshore installation companies to smart grids, energy storage,
and more. The conference expects 700 industry professionals to attend, and will
invite around 100 speakers to deliver speeches during 14 various sessions, with
the percentage of international participants above 30%. Concurrently, "2013
Shanghai International Distributed Generation Conference" will be launched. It
is designed to build an integrated trade event consisting of distributed
generation, micro-grid and energy storage.
OFFSHORE WIND CHINA is an ideal trade platform for global offshore wind
communication and cooperation. It aims to promote offshore wind progress and
development, to carry the responsibility of going down in history, and to
contribution to the dream and glory of a prospering offshore wind industry.
For inquiries or requests for information, please contact the organizers:
Shanghai International Exhibition Co., Ltd.
Address: 841 Middle Yan'an Road, Shanghai, China
OOCL Plaza, 8th Floor, Post Code: 200040
Tel: (86-21) 6279 2828
Fax: (86-21) 65455124
Email: fjy@siec-ccpit.com
SOURCE Shanghai International
Wishing all of you a happy new year!
Awro.
Pray you will have a good 2013 too. Matter of fact, I hope all who read this board have a great one if you know what I mean? $$$
He tells me he simply has to wait for them.
China to account for 30% global wind power [2012-12-25]
China could account for 30% of global installed wind power capacity by 2030.
Statistics from the International Energy Agency (IEA) showed China’s wind power installed capacity could reach 279GW by 2030, two points below the EU. It also predicted China’s wind sources could generate 330TWh of clean power by 2015.
In a roadmap developed with the IEA, the country plans to use onshore and offshore turbines to generate 8.4% of its energy by 2030 and double the share 20 years later. It currently aims to add 15GW of wind power every year to help it generate 17% of its electricity by 2050.
According to the latest ‘2012 Global wind power development outlook’, wind power could supply 12% of the world’s electricity needs and exceed 20% by 2030. The total wind power installed capacity reached 44.7GW at the end of 2010 and 62.3GW last year. The figure is predicted to reach 80GW by the end of this year.
Last week the IEA also predicted China would surpass the rest of the world in coal demand in the next five years.
Is Larry even doing anything?
Anybody (besides Plumo and his 'had lunch with Larry' bs),
have any input into what Larry is doing these days?
I'm guessing he sits around his house playing video games.
Happy Hollidays
plumo
long and strong wwei 2013
Our time will come !!!!!!!!!
long and strong 2013
Chinese wind power firms lifted by project approvals [2012-12-20]
Share prices for wind power companies and equipment suppliers climbed Wednesday after authorities approved over 100 new wind power projects.
Sinovel Wind Group Co., one of China's leading wind turbine producers, surged 4.13 percent to 5.29 yuan (0.84 U.S. dollars). Shares of Xinjiang Goldwind Science & Technology Co. gained 0.95 percent to 5.32 yuan. XJ Electric Co. rose by the daily 10-percent limit to 18.83 yuan.
The projects are spread over 16 provincial-level regions in central and east China, including Shanxi, Zhejiang, Fujian, Shandong, Hubei and Hunan, Wednesday's China Securities Journal reported.
Many Chinese wind farms are sitting idle, as the speed at which they have been connected to the country's power grid has lagged behind the speed of the sector's expansion.
However, the new projects' grid connection issues have already been settled, the newspaper cited industry analysts as saying, adding that the projects will benefit wind power developers and equipment suppliers struggling over a shortage of orders.
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Welwind Energy Receives Formal Documentation for Zhanjiang Windfarm Project From Zhanjiang Government
ZHANJIANG, July 16, 2010 -- Welwind Energy Int. Corp. recently obtained formal documentation for the relocation plan for the company's Zhanjiang Windfarm. The document states, "…it is suggested (by the Urban Development and Reform Administration) to move the wind power project to Nansan Island of Potou District of Zhanjiang City..." The comments include, "all parties agree to the opinion of the Urban Development and Reform Administration". Government officials who signed the relocation approval include Zhanjiang's new Government Mayor (Mr. Ruan Risheng), the Chief of Comprehensive Branch (Mr. Huang Qiang), Zhanjiang Government Vice-Mayor in Charge of Industry, (Mr. Wang Zhong Bing), Chief Secretary of Zhanjiang City Government (Mr. Zhu Lu), Zhanjiang Government Secretary-General (Mr. Li Lian), and Vice of Chief of Development and Reform Bureau (Mr. Liao Guo Shu).
In a meeting with Mr. Risheng, Government Mayor of Zhanjiang, he expressed great concern on behalf of Welwind for the significant delays the company has experienced and intimated that he will do everything possible in order to expedite Welwind's relocation and PPA process.
It was acknowledged by all Government officials involved, that Welwind met every criteria required in the PPA process.
*******************************************************************************************************************
Welwind Energy International Corp.
http://welwind.com
The 750kW Engga-turbine at Welwind's Zhanjiang Project
The potential value of the Zhanjiang Windfarm project based on 49MW - with a final 600MW aim
Yearly Cash Flows
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year Pre-tax After-tax Cumulative
# $ $ $
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
01 6,169,545 6,169,545 -13,133,613
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
03 7,077,269 7,077,269 558,792
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
05 8,053,922 8,053,922 16,169,340
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
10 9,582,330 9,582,330 63,325,937
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
15 4,220,843 4,220,843 87,019,525
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
20 13,072,147 13,072,147 155,309,896
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
25 16,606,800 16,606,800 234,391,049
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Welwind Energy International Corp. FINANCIALS & BOARD COMPOSITION
Welwind Energy International Corp. - Sec Filings
www.Sec.gov/Welwind CSA Calendar
Stock Info and Financials as of Nov 22, 2010
* Common Shares:
- Authorized: 290 000 000
- Issued and outstanding: 266 439 359
* Preference Shares:
- Authorized: 10 000 000
- Issued and outstanding: 10 000 000
Financial-Times MarketWatch Morningstar Cbs
Technical Indicators
StockCharts Barchart StockTA Profitspi Trade-Ideas Monthly Share Volume
Beneficial Ownership of Common Stock as of March 18, 2010
09.0M: Junyi Feng
08.0M: Tammy-Lynn McNabb
06.5M: Larry McNabb
06.0M: Zeng Zhigao
00.5M: Patrick Higgins
Officers & Directors as a Group - Owned Percent: 11.82%
Insider Activity CSA/CTO Sec Form5 Insider Holdings
Management Biographies
EdgarOnline Reuters PeopleFilingResults Zoominfo SimonWong
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Welwind Energy International Corp. INVESTOR RELATIONS
Welwind Energy International Corp. - YellowPages.ca
203 - 22561 Dewdney Trunk Road GoogleMaps
Maple Ridge, British Columbia, Canada V2X3K1
Tel: 604-463-8487 TF: 1-866-677-2272
info@welwind.com www.welwind.com
Welwind Conference Calls
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Welwind Energy International Corp. PRESS RELEASES AND ARTICLES OF INTEREST
News - GlobeNewswire Silobreaker RenewableEnergyWorld 24hGold Otcmarkets
Feb 18 2011 Chinese Stocks to watch
http://www.wallstreetnewscast.com/news/2011/february/china1467.html http://www.wallstreetnewscast.com /news/2011/february/ludlow1576.html
Dec 23 2010 Edgar Online - Welwind Files SEC Form 10K/A and 10Q/A
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1052671/000107878210003015/welwind10ka123109.htm
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1052671/000107878210003019/welwind10qa063010.htm
Dec 15 2010 Welwind Energy Exploring New Venture Division for Company
http://www.wallstreetnewscast.com/news/2010/december/wwei9712.html http://welwindventures.wordpress.com/
Nov 22 2010 Edgar Online - Welwind Files SEC Form 10Q Quarterly Report
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1052671/000107878210002735/welwind10q093010.htm
Oct 18 2010 World's First Single Tower Multi-Set Vertical Axis Turbine From YATU to be Used and Marketed by Welwind Energy Int. Corp.http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/news.html?d=203963 YATU wind.com About-Yatu Images Info Vertical-Axis-Wind-Turbine
Sept 29 2010 Welwind Energy International Progress Report
http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/news.html?d=202567
Sept 14 2010 Ludlow Capital Issues Research Update on Welwind Energy Inernational Corp.
http://www.wallstreetnewscast.com/news/2010/september/updates.html
Sept 13 2010 Welwind Energy enters into a Formal Financing and Strategic Partnership Agreement with YATU Industries Investment Co. Ltd.
http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/news.html?d=201343 YATU wind.com Baidu-Search YATU YATU-Wind-Power-Equipm-Co QualityStocks
Aug 03 2010 Welwind Energy International Announces Revenues for First Phase of Inner Mongolia Wind Farm Project
http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/news.html?d=198287
July 20 2010 Welwind Energy International Negotiates Terms and Conditions for Inner Mongolia Financing / Opens Office in Hong Kong
http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/news.html?d=196931 HongKongOffice_Google-Maps HongKong Office
July 16 2010 Welwind Energy International Receives Formal Documentation for Zhanjiang Wind Farm Project from Zhanjiang Government
http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/news.html?d=196643
July 15 2010 Welwind Energy International Signs Letter of Intent for 80% Interest in 300MW Wind Energy Project in Inner Mongolia
http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/news.html?d=196537 Testpower.cn Hohhot-Inner-Mongolia_Google-Maps
July 01 2010 Welwind Energy International Enters into Negotiations for Large Scale Wind Farm
http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/news.html?d=195543
June 25 2010 Canadian Securities Administrators - British Columbia Securities Commission
http://cto-iov.csa-acvm.ca/SearchArticles.asp?Instance=101&Form=1&Names1=Welwind+Energy+International+Corporation
April 15 2010 EDGAR Online - Welwind Files SEC Form 10K Annual Report
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1052671/000107878210000826/0001078782-10-000826-index.htm
March 2 2010 EDGAR Online - Annual Statement of Changes in Beneficial Ownership of Securities
http://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/browse-edgar?action=getcompany&CIK=0001052671&type=&dateb=&owner=only&count=40
Feb 23 2010 EDGAR Online - Regulation FD Disclosure
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1052671/000107878210000345/0001078782-10-000345-index.htm
Feb19-22/10 EDGAR Online - Notification of Change of Directors
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1052671/000107878210000314/0001078782-10-000314-index.htm
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1052671/000107878210000316/0001078782-10-000316-index.htm
Feb 18 2010 Welwind Energy International Reaches Agreement With Zhanjiang Government for Relocation of the Windfarm Project
http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/news.html?d=184587 FinancialWire™ Nansan-Potou Bridge Nansan Maplandia Nansan Google-Maps
Oct 27 2009 Welwind Energy International Corporate Update
http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/news.html?d=176589 Phase 1-2-3 Zhanjiang-Project
June 4 2009 Welwind Energy International Retains Securities Legal Counsel
http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/news.html?d=166648 FinancialWire™ The-Barkats-Law-Group
Feb 26 2009 Audio Recording of the Conference Call available on Welwind's Website
http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/news.html?d=160412 Audio-Recorded-Conference-Calls
Feb 1 2009 Welwind Pulls Out of Chinese Windfarm Joint Venture - PricewaterhouseCoopers Deals 2008
http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/news.html?d=158728 PricewaterhouseCoopers.PowerDeals-2008.pdf
Dec 1 2008 Welwind Announces Final PPA Approval for Zhanjiang Wind Farm from Local Government http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/news.html?d=155570 http://www.cwpc.cn/cwpc/en/node/5488
Sep 29 2008 Companies West Group Inc. invests in Welwind Energy Int.
Companies-West-Group-Inc-Invests-in-Welwind-Energy-International-FRANKFURT-A38-903996 Nawindpower CompaniesWest Frankfurt
June 25 2008 Welwind Making Moves by Jason Hamlin
http://www.goldstockbull.com/articles/welwind-energy-making-moves/
June 17 2008 Welwind Negotiates Joint Venture Partnership with Yatu / Engga - Signing Turbine Supply Agreement
http://www.welwind.com/ir-news_releases_061708.php WindPower in Guangdong - p17 http://www.engga.com.cn
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Welwind Energy Int in CHINESE PRESS ~ googlish translation
Zhanjiang-Windcor-Windfarm.Ltd. Business Registration n° 440800400002551 Guangdong Province Information Center
Zhanjiang-Windcor-Windfarm.Ltd._CIECC-Operation-Code n* 4400785785484_China-Ministry-of-Commerce
Zhanjiang-Windcor-Windfarm.Ltd._-_Company-Info > Yellow-Pages > Office-Info > China-Office > Google-Maps
Zhanjiang-Windcor-Windfarm.Ltd._-_China-Office_Zhanjiang-Development-Zone RoomE12
Zhanjiang-Windcor-Windfarm.Ltd._-_Picture_750kW-Engga-Wind-Turbine
Zhanjiang-Windcor-Windfarm.Ltd._-_Patent > Patent > Patent > Patent > Patents
Zhanjiang-Windcor-Windfarm.Ltd._-_Geological-Exploration-Bureau_Guangdong-Province
Zhanjiang-Windcor-Windfarm.Ltd._-_FoundationStone_Zhanjiang.gov.cn
Zhanjiang-Windcor-Windfarm.Ltd._-_SigningCeremony > SigningCeremony > SigningCeremony > www.rainbowplan
Zhanjiang-Windcor-Windfarm.Ltd._-_Guangdong-Electric-Power
Zhanjiang-Windcor-Windfarm.Ltd._-_Zhanjiang-Developm&Reform-Bureau_49.5MW-wind-Project
Zhanjiang-Windcor-Windfarm.Ltd._-_Prov-Water-&-Soil-Conservation-Program-Approval 2009-09-27 Line-621 > Line-109 > Line-17 > Gd-Water
Zhanjiang-Windcor-Windfarm.Ltd._-_PPA-Approval-from-Local-Government
Zhanjiang-Windcor-Windfarm.Ltd._-_Company-Profile_www.jobui.com
Zhanjiang-Windcor-Windfarm.Ltd._-_Job-Recruitment_windcorzj@163.com
Zhanjiang-Windcor-Windfarm.Ltd._-_Welwind-Employee-having-a-Motorcycle-Accident-on-his-way-to-work
Zhanjiang-Economic-and-Technological-Development-Zone_Hudong-Wiki > Development-Zone > Development-Zone
Nearly-40-Wind-Power-Development-Projects-Situated-in-Zhanjiang-District
Zhanjiang Wind Electric Fields -- Xuwen/ Leizhou/ Wuchuan/ Donghai-Island/ Nansan-Island
District-Planning -- Nansan-Island-Increases-Wind-Power-Industry -- Jan 21 2010
Nansan-Potou-Bridge -- Feb 02 2010
Nansan-Island Wind-Power-Resources -- May 29 2010
Engga_London-Asia-Capital.LPC_Canada-WeiLi-Energy-International.Co_ChinaWindPower
Engga-To-Build-Yangjiang-Manufactory_London-Asia-Capital.LPC_CanadaWeiLiEnergyInt
Engga-To-Build-Yangjiang-Manufactory_London-Asia-Capital.LPC_CanadaWeiLiEnergyInt
Engga-wins-contract-from-the-Canadian-Company-WeiLi-to-supply-2-wind-farm-projects
Guangdong-Province-Wind-Power-Development_China-Academic-Journal 2009-10-13
Guangdong-Province-Economic-Development_Zhanjiang+Yangjiang-the-Backbone-of-Guangdong
Guangdong-Province-Promotes-the-Development-of-Renewable-Energy
Guangdong-Provincial-Development-&-Reform-Commission_Wind-Farms-in-Western-Guangdong
www.GOOGLE search/Chinese > translate.GOOGLE.com English
www.YAHOO search//Chinese > translate.YAHOOcn.com English
www.SOSO search//Chinese > translate.SOSO.com English
www.BAIDU search//Chinese > translate.BAIDU.com English
www.Google Nansan/Chinese > translate.Yahoo Nansan-island Wind-Power idem
www.Google Deng Engga//Chinese
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Welwind Energy Int STRATEGIC ALLIANCES & PARTNERS
http://www.welwind.com/about-us_Alliances
www.cmic.com Cmic.com/Profile/ProgramShow China-Machine-Building-International//Cmic.com
Cmic-AAA-Class-Credit Cmic Subsidiary of Sinomach --- Sinomach.com A-PowerEnergy.com//Cmic
www.engga.com WindPower-Guangdong p17 Globenewswire CnBusiness GuangzhouDaily
EnggaTurbines YangjiangCity UK.EnggaCoLtd Londonasia Engga-GVCGC Engga-WWEI
Engga-Vestas Engga's WindTurbineDevelopment 1.5MW-Turbine Cn.Turbine-Technology
Welwind signed a Development and Partnership Agreement with Windcor http://www.windcor.com
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
TRANSFER AGENT - LAWYERS - AUDITORS - ACCOUNTANTS
http://www.welwind.com/contact_us.php
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
ARTICLES & BOOKS related to renewable energy
Today's Wind Energy News
AltenergyStocks ShanghaiZoom RenewableEnergyWorld NewNet WallStreetJournal Reuters Bloomberg Cleantech BusinessGreen
Ecf ClimateArk NRDC Cn.NRDC Cn.5e Cn.Dialogue Cn.Business Cn.Policy Cn.Daily Cn.Industry sxCoalNewsList sxCoalWind WindPowerNet
Huxiawind Ndrc.gov.cn Nyj.Ndrc Cwea.org CweraCma.gov Cwei.org Cses.org Cnwee CnGreenergy CnNewenergy CnWindEnergy WindPower
GuangdNews GuangdEconomy YangjiangGov ZhanjiangGov ZhanjiangDaily Zhanjiang-Info ZhanjiangUrbanPlanning ZhanjiangSilobreaker
Bloomb.Wind Energy indx BWIND - - FT Wind Energy indx FAN - - PowerShares Wind Energy PWND - - Wilderhill New Energy index NEX
www.bloomb.BWIND - - www.ftportf.com/FAN http://yahoo.FAN - - www.powers/PWND http://yahoo.PWND - - www.NEXindx.com http://yahoo.^NEX
Power Purchase Agreement Wikipedia - - Wikinvest Wind Energy
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_Purchase_Agreement http://www.wikinvest.com/industry/Renewable_Energy
China Renewable Energy Law
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/story?id=23531 http://ecoworld.com/features/2006/07/15/wind-power-in-china
China Rules Comprising the Renewable Energy Law
http://www.reilproject.org/documents/RELaw_Assist_China_final_issues_paper.pdf http://cdm.ccchina.gov.cn/english/NewsInfo.asp?NewsId=3097
China National Development and Reform Commission - National Coordination Committee on Climate Change
National-Developm-Reform-Commission Climate-Change-InfoNet Committee-Climate-Change Climate-Change-Links OnGrid-WindPower-Price
About-CDM CDM.China.gov.cn CDM-Project-Database
China Guangdong Wind Power
Wind-Power-in-Guangdong Greenpeace ChinaKnowledge.com-Business-CityInfo Zhanjiang-General-Picture
China Wind Power Report 2007 - Production Capacities
China-Wind-Power-Report.2007 China-Windfarms-Database China's-Energy-Sector
China List of Wind Farms - Satellite View - - China Economy Overview
China-Database-Windfarms-Map Wind-Power-in-China China-Economy-Overview
Canada List of Wind Farms - Satellite View - - Provincial Targets and Actions
http://www.canwea.ca/farms/wind-farms_e.php http://www.ec.gc.ca/doc/virage-corner/2008-03/571Annex3_eng.htm SupplyDemandReport-Alberta
US List of Wind Farms Maps - - US 20% Wind Energy by 2030 Report - - EPA
http:/www.awea.org/projects http:/www.20%wind.org www.epa.gov/Airmarkets
North American Renewable Energy Study 2009
www.nerc.com/files-Report_041609.pdf American-Clean-Energy-and-Security-Act-2009 www.VancouverEconomic.com /GreenTechStudy.pdf
Global Wind Power Largest Markets - - Windfarms Database
World-Wind-Power-Chartgallery www.thewindpower.Countries-Map Wind-Navigator
Global Wind Power Reports
Int.EnergyOutlook-2009 > CompleteReport GlobalStatusReport2009 Update Gwec.Global-installed-WindPower Gwec.2008 Guangdong p25
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
UN-Convention-on-Climate-Change UNFCCC-Emissions-Data-Visualized-on-Google-Maps China-after-København
Compare Wind Energy with Alternative Energy Sources
http://www.rsc.org/Publishing/Journals/EE/article.asp?doi=b809990c http://www.solarbuzz.com/DistributedGeneration.htm
Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide Concentrations - Keeling Curve
Carbon-Tracker Carbon-Dioxide-in-Atmosphere Keeling-Curve
Non-Climate Factors Driving Climate Change - Global Warming
http://wikipedia/Climate_change http://wikipedia/Global_warming http://www.nasa.gov
Consulate General in Canton China
http://guangzhou.usembassy-china.org.cn/contact-us.html http://www.guangzhou-online.com/ConsulatesPage.htm
http://www.eia.doe.gov http://www.iea.org http://www.awea.org http://www.canwea.ca
www.creia.net www.gwec.net nwcc.com www.nerc.com international-wind-weblinks
Renewable Energy in the US - 2007. The chart shows the potential of Wind Power.
How Wind turbines Work / Wind Energy Basics
http://www1.eere.energy.gov/windandhydro/wind_how.html http://www.windpower-china.cn/files/wea_kosten.JPG
[1] Integration of Alternative Sources of Energy
http://www.amazon.com/Integration-Alternative-Sources-Energy-Farret/dp/0471712329/ref=sr_11_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1207361406&sr=11-1
[2] Grid Integration of Wind Energy Conversion Systems
http://www.amazon.com/Grid-Integration-Energy-Conversion-Systems/dp/0470868996/ref=pd_sim_b_title_6
[3] Wind Energy - Fundamentals, Resource Analysis and Economics
http://www.amazon.com/Wind-Energy-Fundamentals-Resource-Economics/dp/3540309055/ref=pd_sim_b_title_2
[4] Developing Wind Power Projects - Theory and Practice http://www.amazon.com/Developing-Wind-Power-Projects-Practice/dp/1844072622/ref=pd_bxgy_b_text_b
Welwind Energy International Corp. - OTC BB: WWEI.OB - isin: US95046R1068 - wkn: A0LD82
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